A habitat is the immediate area or region of land (or water) that a given organism lives in. An ecosystem is the interactive system of all things living or inanimate that are part of a habitat or a larger system.
One might speak of the habitat of tigers as that region in which they live and hunt, regarding only what is vital to the tigers. The ecosystem within the habitat would be everything including but not limited to what matters to the tigers.
Usually habitats are regarded as being within and smaller than ecosystems.
In length river nile is bigger but in ecosystem and plant and fish variety and depth amazon is bigger
Yes, a biome is larger in scale than a community. A biome encompasses a larger geographic area that shares similar climate, vegetation, and animal life, while a community refers to the interacting populations of different species within a specific ecosystem.
yes
Because the bird is bigger, therefore meaning it affects the ecosystem.
they live in the same habitat
A biosphere is bigger than an ecosystem. The biosphere includes all of Earth's ecosystems, while an ecosystem refers to a specific community of living organisms interacting with each other and their physical environment in a particular area.
No, it is not. It is technically slang, derived from the word "habitate." However, habitation is a word: it is the act of inhabiting or a dwelling place.
The boundaries of an ecosystem can be an entire ecosystem underneath a rock. An overall ecosystem of the planet is a biosphere. An ecosystem, which is the complex of a community of organisms and its environment functioning as an ecological unit, is bigger.
oceans/seas
in the mountations, in trees
No they do not. They can only expand their jaws to devour things a little bit larger than their mouths but usually they go for the smaller easier targets of prey.
one is bigger and the other one is smaleer